Tune into DMTV Milkshake to hear how Amanda Jane Jones' role as founding Kinfolk designer shaped her life now as a design multi-hyphenate!
Frances Bronet, president of Pratt Institute, shares convincing reasons why design students should consider the school for their futures.
Interior architect Alexandra Loew takes us behind SFMOMA's "Conversation Pieces: Contemporary Furniture in Dialogue” exhibition.
From a young age, Avery Thatcher explored all the possibilities of designing gorgeous shapes to apply to walls. She eventually turned it into a career.
Llisa Demetrios, youngest grandchild of Ray + Charles Eames, shares her work at the Eames Institute of Infinite Curiosity and as a bronze sculptor.
If you've ever renovated your home. or are thinking of doing it, you'll want to tune into to today's Milkshake episode to protect your investments.
Designing spaces for art requires a different type of mindset + strategic thinking. Tune in to the latest DMTV Milkshake to hear Koray Duman explain why!
What should modern architecture look like in a post-pandemic world? Matthias Hollwich, founder of NY architecture firm HWKN, clues us in.
No one should tell you what color is the best choice for your home, and Backdrop founders, Natalie and Caleb Ebel, share why. Tune in!
Art and commercial work seems like opposite sides of the spectrum but designer Elyse Graham is drawn to both – tune in to find out why!
Hear interdisciplinary designer Mana Sazegara's take on why there is so much beige furniture on the market and why you should embrace color instead.
Tune in to hear Jin Namgoong and Joonghan Bae of Studio.Oong share their thoughts about the true meaning behind the rise of Korean pop culture.
Tune in to see why this Finnish artist values the slow process of her work – it can take up to six months to complete a piece.
Ted Bradley reflects on making the jump from his corporate career at Google to create lighting designs that were deemed impossible to make.
Aspiring architects usually ask one age-old question: how can they avoid boring jobs? Michael Leckie shares his nugget of wisdom and more.